Get ready for a gripping episode of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” as Season 25 Episode 13, titled “Duty to Hope,” airs on NBC at 9:00 Pm on Thursday, May 16, 2024. In this intense installment, the Svu team is on a race against time to track down a pattern assailant before his crimes escalate to murder.
As the search for the assailant intensifies, tensions run high within the team. Detective Fin finds himself grappling with the emotional fallout when he must contend with the suspect’s aggrieved son, adding an extra layer of complexity to the investigation.
Meanwhile, Ada Carisi feels the pressure to close the case quickly in order to ease public concern, but the stakes are higher than ever as the clock ticks down. With each passing moment, the urgency to apprehend the assailant mounts, leaving no room for error.
Join the Svu team as they navigate the twists and turns of this high-stakes case,...
As the search for the assailant intensifies, tensions run high within the team. Detective Fin finds himself grappling with the emotional fallout when he must contend with the suspect’s aggrieved son, adding an extra layer of complexity to the investigation.
Meanwhile, Ada Carisi feels the pressure to close the case quickly in order to ease public concern, but the stakes are higher than ever as the clock ticks down. With each passing moment, the urgency to apprehend the assailant mounts, leaving no room for error.
Join the Svu team as they navigate the twists and turns of this high-stakes case,...
- 5/10/2024
- by Jules Byrd
- TV Everyday
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Season 25 Episode 13 “Duty to Hope” May 16 2024 Preview & Spoilers
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit fans, we’ve got a fresh off the press preview for the new Season 25 Episode 13 episode titled Duty to Hope!
Find out everything you need to know about the Duty to Hope episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Duty to Hope Season 25 Episode 13 Preview
Get ready for an intense and gripping episode of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” airing on NBC at 9:00 Pm on May 16, 2024. In “Duty to Hope,” the Svu team is on a race against time to track down a pattern assailant before his crimes escalate to murder. With lives on the line, the pressure is on to stop the perpetrator before it’s too late.
Meanwhile, Fin finds himself navigating a delicate situation when he must contend with...
Find out everything you need to know about the Duty to Hope episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Duty to Hope Season 25 Episode 13 Preview
Get ready for an intense and gripping episode of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” airing on NBC at 9:00 Pm on May 16, 2024. In “Duty to Hope,” the Svu team is on a race against time to track down a pattern assailant before his crimes escalate to murder. With lives on the line, the pressure is on to stop the perpetrator before it’s too late.
Meanwhile, Fin finds himself navigating a delicate situation when he must contend with...
- 5/9/2024
- by News
- TV Regular
Conny Van Dyke, a singer-songwriter signed to Motown Records who starred in such films as “W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings” and “Framed,” has died. She was 78.
Van Dyke died on Nov. 11 at her home in Los Angeles due to complications of vascular dementia, her son Bronson Page told Variety.
The Detroit native was a longtime colon cancer and stroke survivor. She got her start in the entertainment industry when she was just 15 and a student in high school, making the film “Among the Thorns” with Tom Laughlin, Bill Wellman Jr. and Stephanie Powers. During that time, Van Dyke also worked as a songwriter for Wheelsville Records in Detroit.
In 1961, Van Dyke signed with Motown Records, making her one of the first white recording artists on the label. Her first two singles, “Oh, Freddy,” written by Smokey Robinson, and “It Hurt Me Too,” previously written and recorded by Marvin Gaye, were...
Van Dyke died on Nov. 11 at her home in Los Angeles due to complications of vascular dementia, her son Bronson Page told Variety.
The Detroit native was a longtime colon cancer and stroke survivor. She got her start in the entertainment industry when she was just 15 and a student in high school, making the film “Among the Thorns” with Tom Laughlin, Bill Wellman Jr. and Stephanie Powers. During that time, Van Dyke also worked as a songwriter for Wheelsville Records in Detroit.
In 1961, Van Dyke signed with Motown Records, making her one of the first white recording artists on the label. Her first two singles, “Oh, Freddy,” written by Smokey Robinson, and “It Hurt Me Too,” previously written and recorded by Marvin Gaye, were...
- 11/11/2023
- by Valerie Wu
- Variety Film + TV
In the 1970s crime films morphed into sadistic vigilante fantasies about tough-guy heroes avenging terrible crimes against their families. Veteran noir director Phil Karlson directed the bruiser’s bruiser Joe Don Baker in a standard tale of violent vengeance, with the violence factor given an extra bloody boost.
Framed
Blu-ray
Kl Studio Classics
1975 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 106 min. / Street Date February 28, 2017 / available through Kino Lorber / 29.95
Starring: Joe Don Baker, Conny Van Dyke, John Marley, Gabriel Dell,, Brock Peters, John Larch, Warren J. Kemmerling, Walter Brooke, Paul Mantee, H.B. Haggerty, Roy Jenson.
Cinematography: Jack A. Marta
Film Editor: Harry W. Gerstad
Stunts: Carey Loftin, Gil Perkins, Buddy Joe Hooker
Original Music: Pat Williams
Written by Mort Briskin from a book by Art Powers & Mike Misenheimer
Produced by Joel Briskin, Mort Briskin
Directed by Phil Karlson
Time for another curiosity review, of a grindhouse gut-basher from the 1970s — a subgenre I avoided when new.
Framed
Blu-ray
Kl Studio Classics
1975 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 106 min. / Street Date February 28, 2017 / available through Kino Lorber / 29.95
Starring: Joe Don Baker, Conny Van Dyke, John Marley, Gabriel Dell,, Brock Peters, John Larch, Warren J. Kemmerling, Walter Brooke, Paul Mantee, H.B. Haggerty, Roy Jenson.
Cinematography: Jack A. Marta
Film Editor: Harry W. Gerstad
Stunts: Carey Loftin, Gil Perkins, Buddy Joe Hooker
Original Music: Pat Williams
Written by Mort Briskin from a book by Art Powers & Mike Misenheimer
Produced by Joel Briskin, Mort Briskin
Directed by Phil Karlson
Time for another curiosity review, of a grindhouse gut-basher from the 1970s — a subgenre I avoided when new.
- 2/28/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
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